Laundry treating device and method for its operation

ABSTRACT

A laundry treating device such as a washing machine has a rotatable drum having a circumferential drum wall for placing the laundry in, a drive motor for the drum, a power control unit for supplying a drive current to the drive motor, current sensor means for supervising the drive current supplied to the drive motor, rotation position sensor means for supervising a rotation position of the drum and at least one protrusion on an inside of the circumferential drum wall. The protrusion is variable and flexible in its height over the inside of the circumferential drum wall and in its outer shape. Actuation means are provided for effecting a change of height and shape of the protrusion. Various curves for the current with varying shape of the protrusions may be recorded and compared with pre-stored reference curves for different types of laundry from various fibers.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application claims priority to European Application No. 18188263.0, filed Aug. 9, 2018, the contents of which are hereby incorporated herein in its entirety by reference.

BACKGROUND

The invention is directed to a laundry treating device, which in particular may be a washing machine or a laundry dryer. Furthermore, the invention is directed to a method for operating such a laundry treating device.

In the field of laundry treating devices such as washing machines or laundry dryers, there is a constant strive to improve laundry treating processes even further. One exemplary point of concern is to adapt the treating process to the kind of laundry being treated, which in particular means to various fibers, such as polyester, cotton or wool. This serves to better adapt the laundry treating process to the main portion of fibers present in the device for reducing the wear on the laundry. Furthermore, in the case of synthetic fibers such as mainly polyester, a problem arises by microfibers being flushed out of the device and into the sewage, where it is difficult to extract from the sewage. This is a rising environmental problem.

BRIEF SUMMARY

It is thus an object of the present invention to provide a laundry treating device as well as a method for its operation with which problems of the art can be avoided and, in particular, a laundry treating process can better be adapted to specific types of laundry or fibers the laundry is made of, respectively.

This is solved by a laundry treating device according to claim 1 and a method for its operation according to claim 12. Advantageous and preferred configurations of the invention are the subject of the further claims and are explained in more detail below. In this case, some of the features are described only for the laundry treating device or only for the corresponding method. However, regardless of this, they are intended to be able to apply by themselves for the laundry treating device and for the corresponding method independently of one another. The wording of the claims is made the content of the description by means of express reference.

The laundry treating device may preferably be a washing machine, a laundry dryer or a combined device with both functions. The laundry treating device has a rotatable drum having a circumferential drum wall, wherein the laundry is being placed in the drum for the laundry treating process. A drive motor for the drum is provided as well as a power control unit, which serves to supply a drive current to the drive motor. The drive motor as well as a force transmission to the drum can be as known in the art, preferably with a belt. Furthermore, current sensor means are provided for supervising the drive current being supplied to the drive motor. These current sensor means are preferably extremely sensitive and very accurate. A rotation position sensor means is provided for supervising a rotation position of the drum. They preferably can discriminate the rotation position of the drum down to rotation angles of about 5°, preferably about 3° or only 1°. At least one protrusion is provided on an inside of the circumferential drum wall, preferably two or three such protrusions. These protrusions are basically known and provided as a standard in such laundry treating devices. They serve to better agitate and rotate the pieces of laundry during a washing process as well as during a drying process of wet laundry. Such protrusions are known in a wide variety of shapes.

According to the invention, the at least one protrusion is variable, movable and/or flexible in its height over the inside of the circumferential drum wall. In addition or as an alternative, the protrusion may be variable in its outer shape or, respectively, its cross-section when viewed in axial direction of the drum. Actuation means are also provided to effect a change of this height or this shape of the protrusion. These actuation means are preferably such that they can be controlled and activated in exact manner as wanted.

In this way the invention provides a possibility to have the variable protrusions adapt to different kinds or stages of laundry treating processes. This may differ between rinsing the laundry at the beginning of the washing process, the washing itself as well as a spinning of the laundry close to the end to remove water out of the laundry. Furthermore, by changing the shape of the protrusion in an exactly defined way during a specific program of the device, it is possible to retrieve information about the laundry being present in the drum, in particular to detect the majority of the kind of fibers of the laundry in the drum. This is being done with the method of the invention, wherein in a first and preceding step of the method, various reference curves for the drive current of the drive motor are recorded, wherein one of several variables is varied. These variables are height or shape of the protrusion, drum rotation speed, drum rotation direction, weight of the laundry being present in the drum, typical size of pieces of laundry in the drum and major fiber portion of the laundry. Preferably, drum rotation speed is not varied to limit the number of reference curves, which can also be the case for the drum rotation direction.

For each mentioned reference curve, only one of these variables is being varied. The other variables are being held constant. These reference curves are stored in a storage of the laundry treating device, preferably in its device control or a storage thereof. In a further second step, when the device is loaded with laundry in its drum, a testing is performed as second step before the actual treatment or treating of the laundry begins. At least one of the variables of shape of the protrusion, drum rotation speed, drum rotation direction is varied. The drive current is monitored or supervised during this second step, in particular as a continuous curve, and then a comparison is made with the various reference curves of the above-mentioned storage. This serves to determine at least one variable of the group of weight of the laundry, typical size of pieces of laundry, and, above all, major fiber portion of the laundry by the best corresponding or most similar curves. After this, the actual treatment of the laundry in the device is adapted to the variable or variables detected before, which means to the weight of the laundry, typical size of pieces of laundry and/or major fiber portion of laundry. Such a discrimination of these characteristics of the laundry is mainly achieved by a very accurate supervision of the drive current supplied to the drive motor. This is based on the aspect of the invention that, especially with a rather low speed of the drum with less than 100 rpm, preferably between 50 rpm and 30 rpm, the typical behavior of laundry inside the drum is between being rotated together with the drum with mostly no relative movement to the drum or falling off the inner walls of the drum or off the protrusions at a certain height. A signal in the current sensor means for the drive current indicates when laundry is falling off of the protrusion or is sliding over the protrusion during the rotation movement, because in this case the load on the drive motor is slightly reduced. When the pieces of laundry fall down onto the lower part of the inside of the drum wall, the drive motor is slightly slowed down and, in consequence, has to produce a slightly larger moment. This can then be detected in the drive current, preferably as small spikes, which information in turn can be combined with the position information of the drum together with the information about the rotation speed of the drum.

It becomes clear from the aforesaid that the main purpose of the invention is to improve the actual treatment of the laundry by making use of the information about weight of the laundry, typical size of pieces of laundry, major fiber portion or the like, that has been gathered before. The role of the variable or flexible protrusions is essential to gather this information by allowing variations of the way the laundry is rotated in the drum.

By changing the drum rotation direction it is possible to make use of different variations of the shape of the protrusions if they are not symmetrical as described above. This allows for the protrusions not to have to be shape-variable along both directions along a circumferential direction of the drum. They only need to be flexed to one side with one drum rotation direction. A flexing to the other side can be dispensed of by simply changing the drum rotation direction into the opposite.

In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the laundry treating device has a device control having a processing means for calculating or processing a rotation position of the drum and for processing a drive current from the respective sensor means for the drive current. Such a processing means preferably is a microprocessor or a respective controller. The rotation position of the drum is preferably calculated by detecting a rotation position of the drive motor for the drum, for example by an incremental encoder provided on the drive motor as is known in the art. The processing means is also adapted to calculate the load or weight of laundry in the drum, in particular by making use of the information from the drive current sensor means. The processing means may also calculate the major fiber portion of the laundry by the information gathered by the comparison of actual parameters with various reference curves as explained before. In consequence, the processing means may adapt at least one parameter of a further laundry treating process to better take into account the detected load and/or a major fiber portion of the laundry. This may serve to better clean the laundry, treat it faster or in a more energy-saving way, to treat the laundry with more care and also to avoid unnecessary or avoidable formation of microfibers made from synthetic material. This can be achieved by changing, preferably lowering, a temperature of the water used for the laundry process, a shape of the at least one protrusion or preferably a rotation speed of the drum. It is also possible to introduce certain additives or additional laundry treating substances into the laundry treating process when it has been detected that the laundry is mainly or only made up of pieces of synthetic material. Those additives may for example reduce the friction of the laundry or its fabric, respectively, resulting in a reduction of microfibers produced.

A storage mentioned before for the processing means is preferably adapted to store various groups of curves or diagrams, which are being representative of a dependency of the drive current of the load in the drum as well as of the major fiber portion of the laundry. One additional variable to these two values may be a certain position or shape of the at least one protrusion. This is a preferable way to create a basis for making a better comparison mentioned before.

Supervising or measuring the drive current supplied to the drive motor may also serve to measure a force or an impulse, respectively, acting on the drum when pieces of laundry slide down in the drum along the inside of the circumferential drum wall during rotation of the drum. Such a sliding of the laundry usually ends when they hit the next protrusion rotating together with the drum. The higher the force or impulse, the more representative a signal or variation of the signal in the drive current is.

In a further embodiment of the invention, a water level sensor or a water amount sensor in the drum is provided. This additional information may also be used in the processing means to better evaluate information about the laundry. During the aforementioned second step of testing the laundry being present in the drum, the laundry should be wet with water, but preferably there is no water in the drum or in its lower region, such that the drum does not rotate in such residual water in its lower region.

Also a temperature sensor for the water temperature may be provided, for example in a lower region or a sump of or for the drum. Such a temperature sensor not only serves for taking the water temperature into account during the second step of testing the laundry, but also for heating the water of the washing process to a certain temperature in an exact way.

For changing the height or the shape or, respectively, the overall form of the protrusion, a passive actuating device may be provided in one embodiment of the invention. This means that there is no directly energized mechanic actor such as an electric motor or an electromagnetic device provided in the drum or in the protrusion itself, respectively. Such a passive actuation device preferably comprises temperature dependent shape changing material, which may be in the form of a spring, a lever or a rod. This passive actuation device can be influenced by varying its temperature. This may be either made by changing the water temperature inside the drum, so that the actuation means is being influenced by this water temperature, which in turn again can be influenced by respectively heating the water. Such is easy in a laundry treating device such as a washing machine. Alternatively, the passive actuation device can be directly heated, preferably inductively.

In a preferred embodiment of the invention, especially as a passive actuation device, the actuation device is shape variable in a temperature range that is common for treating laundry. It may be provided that the actuation device and, in consequence, also the protrusion may have a first shape at a temperature of below 30° C. They may have a second shape at a temperature above 30° C. It may even be provided that there is at least one further temperature step with the actuation device having a third shape at a temperature above 40° C. Such a division into steps of about 10° C. allows for exact influencing of the actuation device, while at the same time using a temperature range that is still acceptable for most pieces of laundry to be treated.

In another embodiment of the invention, the temperature dependent shape changing material of the actuation means for the protrusion can be inductively heated. This is achieved in an easy way by the shape changing material being made of ferromagnetic material or any other material that may be inductively heated or being in contact with such inductively heated material. This allows for an induction heating device to heat the actuation means to be placed outside of the drum. Then the induction heating device is placed at a dry place where it can also be easily fixed or repaired, because it may be fixed to a drum receptacle of the laundry treating device which is not movable or does not rotate, respectively. This facilitates also an electrical connection to this induction heating device due to a simple way of fixing. The actuation device may pass by radially inward of the induction heating device and be heated consequently when in range, even though this may be for a short span of time when the drum is rotating at constant speed. To allow for a faster or more intense heating, a long induction heating device may be provided or, alternatively, several induction heating devices placed one next to the other. It may also be provided that the drum is brought into a position where the actuation means are directly close to the induction heating device, stopping the drum or resting the drum in this position for some time, for example 3 sec to 10 sec, for the induction heating device to sufficiently heat the actuation device for effecting its change of shape, which in turn effects a change of shape of the protrusion. After that, as it may take some time for the actuation means to cool down and change shape back again, the second step of the invention with testing the behavior of the laundry in the drum may be continued.

In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the protrusion is made from elastic and flexible material in the form of a trough. Such a trough has two longitudinal end edges, which are advantageously parallel to each other. The protrusion is fixed to the inside of the drum with these two end edges. This results in that in an initial state of the protrusion, it has a certain initial height as well as a certain initial profile. This may be symmetrical as explained before, but need not be. In at least a further state of the protrusion, the height is being slightly diminished, wherein the protrusion is flexed laterally to the side along a circumferential direction of the drum. This may be done in a small number of steps, for example up to three steps. On the one hand, the discrimination between varying behavior of the pieces of laundry in the drum allows for more detailed analysis. On the other hand, the step of testing too many varying parameters may take too long for the user to wait before the actual laundry treating process may begin. Furthermore, it should be ascertained that the state of the protrusion and also the state of the actuation device is known, which again means that not too many varying states of the protrusion should be used, lest an error is made.

Although an initial state of the protrusion may be symmetrical in its profile when viewed from the side, this is not mandatory. A height of the protrusion may be between 3 cm and 10 cm. A flexing laterally to the side of the protrusion may be in a range between 1 cm and 3 cm, which means between 10% and 50% of its height. The protrusion may also be water permeable, for example by having small holes or being perforated.

It is also possible to vary the shape of the protrusion in the first or in the second step such that it includes flexing the protrusion from a maximum into one direction along the circumferential direction of the drum to a maximum into the opposite direction. Preferably, the flexing between these two maxima takes place in steps. It is most preferable if there are at least three steps.

The protrusion may be made from sufficiently flexible material such as thin metal sheet, preferably made from stainless steel. Preferably, the protrusion is made from synthetic material. The actuation means are preferably located inside the protrusion such that they are not damaged by the laundry or a high number of laundry treating processes. The actuation means may be arranged sealed against water inside the protrusion. Preferably, however, they may well come into contact with the water inside the drum and, consequently, be sufficiently protected against corrosion by the use of suitable material. This allows for the actuation means to be heated or cooled directly by the water in the drum.

These and further features are evident not only from the claims but also from the description and the drawings, the individual features each being implemented by themselves or in multiples in the form of subcombinations for an embodiment of the invention and in different fields and being able to be advantageous and independent protectable embodiments for which protection is claimed here. The division of the application into individual sections and subheadings does not limit the general validity of the statements made thereunder.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

In the following, an embodiment of the invention will be described in detail with reference to the drawings. Throughout the drawings, the same elements will be denoted by the same reference numerals.

FIG. 1 a schematic front view onto a washing machine according to the invention with pieces of laundry in it,

FIG. 2 a schematic drawing of the forces acting on a piece of laundry in the drum of the washing machine,

FIG. 3A to 3D various courses of actual movement of pieces of laundry in the drum with a variation of fiber and size,

FIG. 4 a simplified curve of the drive current over time with spikes indicating movement of pieces of laundry,

FIG. 5 an enlarged drawing of a protrusion in the drum having inner actuation means and an outside induction coil for activating them,

FIG. 6 the actuator of FIG. 5 in detail being made up of a socket with a rod in it, a conventional spring and a spring made of temperature dependent shape changing material, at a temperature below 30° C. and at a temperature above 30° C.,

FIG. 7 a schematic drawing of the protrusion on the inside of the drum according to FIG. 5 with three different shapes and

FIG. 8 another schematic drawing of the protrusion according to FIG. 5 with a symmetric change of shape to both lateral sides.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

From FIG. 1 a schematic drawing of a washing machine 11 according to the invention can be taken. Washing machine 11 has a housing 12 with a rotating drum 14 in it being placed in a fix drum receptacle 13 surrounding it. Drum 14 is rotated or driven, respectively, by a drive motor 16 with drive belt 17 as is common in the art. On the inside of drum 14, three protrusions 19 are provided in rib-like form or in the form of a triangle with a rounded tip pointing inside the drum 14. The protrusions 19 are shown in profile and can preferably have this form in a direction parallel to the rotation axis of drum 14.

Inside drum 14, several pieces of laundry 30 are shown being rotated and thrown about. This will be described in detail later.

Drive motor 16 is driven or energized by power control unit 32, which again is controlled by control 34, preferably being the main control of the whole washing machine 11. Control 34 is connected to a current sensor 35 which is able to exactly supervise the drive current supplied to drive motor 16 by the power control unit 32. Such a current sensor is known in the art and can be provided by the person skilled in the art without any problem. It may also be integrated into the power control unit 32 or into the drive motor 16 itself.

Integrated into drive motor 16 is a rotation position sensor means for supervising or detecting a rotation position of the drum, which is not shown here due to the integration. Such a rotation position sensor means can be integrated into the drive motor 16 as is also common in the art, preferably as an incremental encoder. The rotation position sensor means is also connected to the central control 34.

Control 34 is also provided with a storage 37 as explained before and will be explained in detail hereinafter, preferably being integrated into one semi-conductor component. Finally, on the outside of drum receptacle 13, an induction coil 40 is provided as an option. Induction coil 40 may serve to act upon an actuator inside protrusion 19, which will also be described in detail hereinafter. Induction coil 40 may also be very long along the circumferential direction of the drum receptacle 13, for example taking up a quarter or even a third of its circumference. Alternatively, a number of single and rather small induction coils may be provided along the circumference.

In FIG. 2, for better basic understanding, drum 14 is shown with a piece of laundry 30 in it. A center of gravity or mass of the piece of laundry 30 is at an angle α to the vertical axis as indicated by the dashed line. Laundry 30 is abutted against the inside of drum 14 due to rotation of the drum 14. The force of gravity FGR is pointing vertically downwards. The centrifugal force FCE generated by the rotation of the drum and depending on its rotation speed is pointing outwards in radial direction away from a center of drum 14 and through the center of gravity of the laundry 30. A frictional force FFR is pointing upwards from the region of contact of laundry 30 with the inside of drum 14 in a circumferential direction or in tangential direction, respectively, which is also at right angle to the centrifugal force FCE. A sliding force FSL is pointing in the opposite direction of the frictional force FFR. The laundry 30 is moved counterclockwise with rotating drum 14 by the frictional force FFR, if it does not abut against a protrusion 19. The sliding force FSL is way of pulling laundry 30 downward again initiated by the gravity force FGR. When the fabric or the fibers of laundry 30 have a small friction coefficient and/or laundry 30 is lightweight, possibly because it does not take up much water, then there is not enough frictional force FFR. In consequence laundry 30 is simply sliding down on the inside of drum 14, most probably also over a protrusion 19. So the behavior of the laundry 30 of being easily rotated with drum 14, especially with the aid of the protrusions 19, depends among others on the friction coefficient of laundry 30 which is also dependent on the type of fiber it is made of.

It is also easy to conceive that the behavior of the laundry 30 also largely depends on the height and the shape of protrusion 19, whether the laundry 30 can slide over it instead of rotating with protrusion 19 or not. So it is easy to conceive that by changing the shape of protrusion 19 different kinds of behavior of laundry 30 can be generated and detected. As the speed and also the angle of rotation of drum 14 is known by way of the rotation position sensor explained before, and due to the fact that this is correlated with the position of the protrusions 19, a signal or a group of signals can be obtained which give an indication of the behavior of laundry 30, which in the end can help to distinguish which kind of fabric laundry 30 is made of, especially which is the major fiber portion, as well as potentially the size of laundry 30. This may help to define optimum process parameters for a laundry treatment process, especially washing the laundry, for the process to be gentle to the fabric to reduce wear of the fabric as well as the generation of fibers or microfibers, respectively. On the other hand, it should of course be ensured that the laundry is cleaned during the washing process.

A detection whether the piece of laundry 30 is sliding over the protrusion 19 or whether it is taken along with protrusion 19 into the rotation movement can be made by supervising the drive current of drive motor 16. In the first case, when laundry 30 slides over the protrusion, a slight, but noticeable ease on the drive motor and the drive current in consequence takes place for a very short span of time until the laundry 30 falls into lower part of drum 14, where it has to be put into rotational movement again, which means that additional strain has to be brought up by the drive motor 16. This results in some kind of spike in the drive current, however small this may be. This additional strain in the form of a spike or any other discontinuous change in the drive current can be detected by corresponding exact current sensor means.

In the second case, when the laundry 30 does not slide over protrusion 19, but is rotating with it and with drum 14, the drive current may slightly vary depending on whether the laundry 30 has to be lifted up in the right upper quadrant of drum 14 according to FIG. 2, possibly also in the right lower quadrant. In the other two quadrants to the left side, the drive current is slightly lower. In any case, if the laundry does not slide over protrusion 19 or does not fall down, there are no discontinuous spikes in the drive current. This will be explained later on in FIG. 4.

FIGS. 3A to 3D show the simplified result of experiments with laundry of two different types of fibers and different sizes. The laundry has been marked with a kind of characteristic point, and the movement of this characteristic point has then been recorded with a video camera. The result is shown in simplified tracks or courses that the laundry has taken. All the four figures have been recorded in the experiments with a rotation speed of 46 rpm.

In FIG. 3A, a rather small piece of laundry with a size of about 40 cm×40 cm made from polyester has been used. It is obvious that this laundry has a low coefficient of friction and is rather lightweight. It is always sliding and does never even make a half or quarter rotational movement.

FIG. 3B shows a rather small piece of laundry made from cotton, but with the same size. It can be seen that, on the one hand, the piece of laundry has several times been fully or almost fully rotating with drum 14, but that some times it also has been sliding over the protrusion in a way similar to FIG. 3A.

In FIG. 3C, a piece of laundry made from polyester has been used, but being four times larger than before with a size of 80 cm×80 cm. It can be seen that the piece of laundry has been lifted somewhat higher by the protrusion during rotation of drum 14, but still is always sliding over the protrusion.

A comparable piece of laundry made from cotton again with the same size of 80 cm×80 cm is shown in FIG. 3D, which is then mostly making the full rotation with drum 14. It is only rarely sliding over the protrusion or falling down from its top position.

When taking FIGS. 3A to 3D in mind and looking at FIG. 4, which shows drive current iD over time t, it is easily conceived that the behavior of the piece of laundry which in practice is shown by FIGS. 3A to 3D can be read out from supervising the drive current iD. The presence of the spikes or steps in drive current iD is a clear indication that sliding and particularly falling of laundry takes place which impacts the motor torque of drive motor 16 and can consequently be seen in the drive current iD. In the storage 37 of control 34, various such curves for the drive current are stored, each one for a defined set of values for the variables mentioned before. By comparing the measured drive current iD with other drive current curves stored in storage 37, as a kind of reference, the most similar one can be found. This stands for a set of such values. To verify this set of values, at least one further curve for the drive current iD can be obtained, with some parameters changed, for example the shape of protrusion 19. This will result in another comparison and another verification of a most similar reference curve representing a set of such values. After a small number of such comparisons, it is usually possible to determine the values being most similar. Then the information about the details of the laundry being present inside drum 14, that has been gained by the comparison detailed before, is used for optimizing the further laundry treating process. This can be done as explained at the beginning.

It is now also easily conceivable that the information according to FIGS. 3A to 3D can even more be diversified by varying the shape of the protrusions 19. This is now what the invention is not only but mainly about. It is also advisable to make the process of detection of the type of fiber and the size of the laundry when drum 14 is not full, but preferably at most filled with half its nominal load, more preferably with only a third of its nominal load. This allows for each single piece of laundry to mostly have sufficient space for allowing a relative free movement inside the rotating drum 14.

FIG. 5 shows in a side view an enlarged protrusion 19 fixed to the inside of drum 14. An actuator 22 is mounted on top of a metallic base 20, preferably made from or containing aluminium, and abuts with its right end against the inside of protrusion 19. Protrusion 19 is made from an elastic sheet material such as synthetic material or, alternatively, thin stainless steel. Actuator 22 can move to the right as is shown by the arrow into the position represented by the dotted line, thereby pushing protrusion 19 to the right side into a position of protrusion 19′ in dashed line. It is easy to conceive that if the drum 14 is rotating anti-clockwise, modified protrusion 19′ is allowing laundry 30 to slide over it more easily than protrusion 19. If drum 14 is rotating clockwise, however, protrusion 19′ is having a stronger hold on a piece of laundry resulting in the laundry sliding not so easily over it. This variation of the shape of protrusion 19 allows for even more variation of collecting information on the type and size of laundry inside drum 14 during rotation. It is a further option to influence the sliding behavior of laundry over the protrusion, which allows for an even better discrimination of the type of laundry.

As has been explained before, actuator 22 comprises or consists at least partly of shape changing material, which change of shape depends on temperature. For influencing the temperature of actuator 22, or alternatively of base 20 which again may heat up actuator 22, an induction coil 40 is positioned on the outside of receptacle 13 which is controlled by control 34, as has been explained with regard to FIG. 1. Even for a very short span of time while drum 14 together with base 20 is rotating and moving relative to induction coil 40, this may allow for heating up at least to some degree. Another option as an alternative is to vary the temperature of water inside drum 14, which is at least variable between room temperature of about 20° C. and elevated temperature of about 40° C. It is also possible to provide longer or more such induction coils 40.

One possible way of realizing such an actuator 22 can be taken from FIG. 6. A socket 24 has a socket spring 25 made of shape changing material with a temperature dependency, abutting against its base. A hollow rod 27 is inserted into the socket 24 containing a rod spring 28 made from conventional steel. Rod spring 28 abuts against the bottom of rod 27, against which socket spring 25 abuts from the other end. So the two springs 25 and 28 press one against the other. The right end of rod spring 28 abuts against a counterpart inside rod 27, which counterpart is affixed to the outer socket 24. The lower position of actuator 22 in FIG. 6 is present at a temperature of less than 30° C. It can be seen that socket spring 25 has a length of about a third of the length of rod spring 28. When the temperature is rising above 30° C., for example up to 35° C. or even up to 40° C., socket spring 25 is extending due to having passed its point of shape change. It extends by exerting more force against rod spring 28 and, at the same time, compresses rod spring 28 to result in that both springs 25 and 28 have about the same length due to a balance of their spring forces. This is the upper position of actuator 22 in FIG. 6. Rod 27 is pushed out of socket 24 by some distance d, resulting in a lengthening of actuator 22 in its overall length. So it can easily be seen that by changing the temperature of actuator 22 or socket spring 25, it can be varied in its length which can be used according to FIG. 5. It is easy to conceive that also rod spring 28 could be made of shape changing material so that the lower longer state of actuator 22 can be at a higher temperature and the upper state at a higher temperature. The advantage of making socket spring 25 from shape changing material is that it can be heated by base 20 and socket 24 more efficiently. It is also possible to make socket 24 from material that can be heated inductively, which would provide for a more direct heating of socket spring 25. The heating of base 20 or socket 24 itself is easily conceived by a person skilled in the art, for example by induction coil 40. If a change of water temperature is used to change the shape of actuator 22, this need only be done for a short time, preferably 5 minutes at most. So even laundry that should be treated with low temperatures of no more than 30° C. can be processed in this way for an analysis.

In FIG. 7, protrusion 19 mounted to the inside of drum 14 is varied two times in its shape, for example with an actuator not shown but basically similar to the one of FIG. 5. The shape of protrusion 19′ in dashed lines as the first variation has a height h2 which is slightly less than the height h1 of protrusion 19 in its original and symmetrical state. If protrusion 19′ is deformed even more, perhaps by an additional actuator with even another temperature for a shape change, it will result in protrusion 19″ having a shape represented in chain dotted line. This protrusion 19″ has an even more reduced height h3 and, more particular, its shape is asymmetrical to such a degree that, depending on the direction of rotation of drum 14, its effect on laundry regarding sliding down or not is foreseeably very strong. This protrusion 19″ will be able to move laundry along with it very easily and efficiently, with only very slippery pieces of laundry sliding over it instead of being taken along in the rotation of the drum 14.

Another option of changing the shape of protrusion 119 affixed to the inside of drum 114 is shown in FIG. 8. Mounted onto a base 120 are two actuators 122 similar to the one of FIGS. 5 and 6, but pointing and working in opposite direction. In the normal position of actuators 22, which again contain shape changing material as explained before, they abut on the inside of protrusion 119 which has a shape as shown for example in FIGS. 1 and 5. When the actuators 122 are activated, preferably again by a change of temperature, they are in the position according to the dotted line and push the opposite walls of protrusion 119 apart, resulting in a change of shape represented in dashed lines. This new shape of protrusion 119′ in dashed lines is still symmetrical to the same line of symmetry as protrusion 119, but somewhat flattened and also widened at its free end. This modified protrusion 119′ has an effect onto the laundry 30 independent of the rotation direction of drum 14, but will still be noticeable.

By varying the shape of the protrusions during a testing sequence with laundry put into washing machine 11, and evaluating the data resulting from supervising the drive current, control 34 can distinguish which is the major part of fiber of laundry 30 inside drum 14 as well as potentially its typical size. A washing process that is to follow can then be adapted to this information, preferably by mainly trying to reduce the wear onto the laundry if it has been detected that it is substantially or mostly made up of synthetic fiber such as polyester. This again reduces the generation of microfibers into the sewage water of the washing process, which is of growing importance for ecological reasons. 

1. A laundry treating device having: a rotatable drum having a circumferential drum wall for placing laundry in, a drive motor for said rotatable drum, a power control unit for supplying a drive current to said drive motor, current sensor means for supervising said drive current supplied to said drive motor, rotation position sensor means for supervising a rotation position of said drum, at least one protrusion on an inside of a circumferential drum wall of said rotatable drum, wherein said protrusion is variable or movable or flexible in its height over said inside of said circumferential drum wall, or said protrusion is variable or movable or flexible in its outer shape, actuation means are provided for effecting a change of height or shape of said protrusion.
 2. The laundry treating device according to claim 1, wherein said laundry treating device is a washing machine or a laundry dryer.
 3. Device according to claim 1, wherein a device control is provided having a processing means for calculating a rotation position of said drum or for calculating a drive current from said respective sensor means, wherein said processing means is adapted to calculate a load or a weight of laundry in said drum or a major fibre portion of said laundry.
 4. Device according to claim 3, wherein said processing means is adapted to calculate said load or said weight of said laundry in said drum or said major fibre portion of said laundry for adapting parameters of a further laundry treating procedure to said detected load or said detected major fibre portion, wherein said parameters are with regard to a temperature of water, a rotation speed of said drum or a shape of said at least one protrusion.
 5. Device according to claim 3, wherein in said processing means a storage is provided in which various groups of diagrams are stored being representative of a dependency of said drive current of said load in said drum as well as of said major fibre portion of said laundry.
 6. Device according to claim 1, wherein said actuation means for changing said height or said shape of said at least one protrusion is a passive actuation device with a temperature dependent shape changing material in a form of a spring or a lather or a rod.
 7. Device according to claim 6, wherein said actuation device is shape variable such that a first shape is present at a temperature below 30° C. and that a second shape is present at a temperature above 30° C.
 8. Device according to claim 7, wherein a third shape is present above 40° C.
 9. Device according to claim 1, wherein said temperature dependent shape changing material of said actuation means is inductively heatable and made from ferromagnetic material.
 10. Device according to claim 9, wherein outside of said drum an induction heating device is fixedly positioned being placed so as for said actuation device to pass by radially inward of said induction heating device.
 11. Device according to claim 1, wherein said at least one protrusion is made from elastic and flexible material in a form of a trough with two longitudinal end edges, wherein said protrusion is fixed to said inside of said drum with said two end edges such that in an initial state of said protrusion, said protrusion has a certain initial height and a certain initial profile, wherein in at least one further state of said protrusion said height is diminished and said protrusion is flexed laterally to a side along a circumferential direction of said drum.
 12. Device according to claim 11, wherein in an initial state of said protrusion, said protrusion is symmetrical in its profile when viewed from a side, wherein in at least one further state of said protrusion, said protrusion is flexed laterally to a side for between 1 cm and 3 cm.
 13. Method for operating a laundry treating device according to claim 1, wherein: in a first step, various reference curves for said drive current are recorded with a variation of one variable of the group of: shape of said protrusion, drum rotation speed, drum rotation direction, weight of said laundry, typical size of pieces of laundry, major fibre portion of said laundry, wherein for each reference curve only one of said variables is being varied, wherein said other variables are being held constant, said reference curves are being stored, in a second step, when laundry is put into said drum and is actually about to be treated, testing is performed as said second step before starting said treatment of said laundry by varying at least one parameter of the group of: shape of said protrusion, drum rotation speed, drum rotation direction, whereinafter a comparison is made with said various reference curves stored in said storage to determine at least one variable of the group of: weight of said laundry, typical size of pieces of laundry, major fibre portion of said laundry, in a third step, actual treatment of said laundry in said laundry treating device is adapted to said weight of the laundry, said typical size of pieces of laundry and/or said major fibre portion of said laundry.
 14. Method according to claim 13, wherein said reference curves are being stored in a storage of a processing means of a device control.
 15. Method according to claim 13, wherein variables of said laundry treating process are adapted to a kind of laundry or to said major fibre portion of said laundry by varying a temperature of water added to said laundry process or varying a rotation speed of said drum or varying said shape of said protrusion.
 16. Method according to claim 13, wherein by supervising said drive current supplied to said drive motor a force is measured when pieces of laundry slide down in said drum along an inside of said circumferential drum wall while said drum is rotating.
 17. Method according to claim 13, wherein in addition to measuring a force or said current supplied to said drive motor, respectively, said position of said at least one protrusion is determined and taken into account by reading out information of said rotation position sensor means.
 18. Method according to claim 13, wherein additional information input is received by a water level sensor or by a water amount sensor in said drum or by a temperature sensor for said water temperature.
 19. Method according to claim 13, wherein varying said shape of said protrusion in said first step or in said second step includes flexing said protrusion from a maximum into one direction along the circumferential direction of said drum to a maximum into an opposite direction along said circumferential direction of said drum.
 20. Method according to claim 19, wherein said flexing between said two maxima is being made in at least two or three steps. 